[PDF] Twelve Years a Slave: Analyzing Slave Narratives - NEH-Edsitement





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Homework: 12 Years A Slave official trailer Steve McQueen

https://histoire.ac-versailles.fr/IMG/pdf/documents_12_years_a_slave.pdf



FILM STUDY WORKSHEET – FOR THE MOVIE TWELVE YEARS A

FILM STUDY WORKSHEET – FOR THE MOVIE TWELVE YEARS A SLAVE. If you haven't seen the movie already read the questions before you watch the film so that you 



Folklore: Some Useful Terminology

Twelve Years a Slave: Analyzing Slave Narratives. 4 -- Permission is granted to educators to reproduce this worksheet for classroom use. Meantime Harry and 



Film Screening 12 YEARS A SLAVE

12 YEARS A SLAVE. Discussion or Reflection/Response Paper Questions: 1. How does the film treat Solomon Northup's social status both as a free man and as a.



Twelve Years a Slave in the classroom. Background information

29 окт. 2015 г. 14.3 Appendix C – Worksheet 1: Slave Narrative Tradition. North American Slavery. Slave Narratives. LK 12– Letzel. Solomon Northup's “Twelve ...



EDSITEment - Biography of Solomon Northup

Northup's kidnappers robbed him of his free papers and sold him to an infamous slave trader James H. Birch (spelled “Burch” in Twelve Years a Slave). Northup's 



Twelve Years a Slave: Was the Case of Solomon Northup

How did the Fugitive Slave Act of 1793 affect the kidnapping of free blacks and selling them into slavery? Answer: The Fugitive Slave Act triggered a lucrative 



A RESOURCE FOR TEACHERS! A RESOURCE FOR TEACHERS

CD: An audio recording of Twelve Years a Slave is available to accompany the Scholastic Reader. Visits/Internet: Saratoga Springs has a Solomon Northup Day –.



Folklore: Some Useful Terminology

Twelve Years a Slave: Was the Case of Solomon Northup Exceptional? 1 -- Permission is granted to educators to reproduce this worksheet for classroom use.



2018 12 Years a Slave​ Guiding Questions Synopsis: Northups

Do the editors believe that Northup provided an accurate picture of slavery (at least as he saw it)?. Twelve Years a Slave: Narrative of Solomon Northup. 1.



Homework: 12 Years A Slave official trailer Steve McQueen

https://histoire.ac-versailles.fr/IMG/pdf/documents_12_years_a_slave.pdf



2018 12 Years a Slave? Guiding Questions Synopsis: Northups

Do the editors believe that Northup provided an accurate picture of slavery (at least as he saw it)?. Twelve Years a Slave: Narrative of Solomon Northup. 1.



A RESOURCE FOR TEACHERS! A RESOURCE FOR TEACHERS

CD: An audio recording of Twelve Years a Slave is available to accompany the Scholastic Reader. Visits/Internet: Saratoga Springs has a Solomon Northup Day –.



Folklore: Some Useful Terminology

Twelve Years a Slave: Analyzing Slave Narratives. 1 -- Permission is granted to educators to reproduce this worksheet for classroom use.



Folklore: Some Useful Terminology

Twelve Years a Slave: Was the Case of Solomon Northup Exceptional? 1 -- Permission is granted to educators to reproduce this worksheet for classroom use.



Lesson Plans and Resources for Twelve Years A Slave OVERVIEW

As a recipient of One Book resources the Free Library requires that you devote one class period to introducing Twelve Years A Slave to students



Solomon Northup and 12 Years a Slave

12 years a slave. Epps had a small cotton plantation in the Red River area of Louisiana. Epps was a brutal master; used physical and sexual violence.



GCSE English Language Name: Class

11. Twelve years a slave by Solomon Northup – comprehension questions. AO1. 16. 12. Exploring language in Twelve years a slave by Solomon. Northup.



Folklore: Some Useful Terminology

Twelve Years a Slave: Analyzing Slave Narratives. 1 -- Permission is granted to educators to reproduce this worksheet for classroom use. Activity 2.



Folklore: Some Useful Terminology

Twelve Years a Slave: Analyzing Slave Narratives. 1 -- Permission is granted to educators to reproduce this worksheet for classroom use. Activity 1.



Twelve Years a Slave: Analyzing Slave Narratives - NEH-Edsitement

A comprehensive PDF version of lesson plans put out by the publisher including a historical overview discussion questions by chapter a variety of final assessment options and guidance for using the film adaptation in class http://www penguin com/static/ pdf /teachersguides/twelveyears032014b pdf Weekly Lesson Plans



Reading Guides for 12 Years a Slave - framinghamk12maus

12 Years a Slave Guiding Questions Synopsis: Northup's book is a personal narrative about slavery but at the same time he provides us with information about several groups of people with whom he had contact: southern whites free blacks and northern whites (indirectly)



Searches related to twelve years a slave worksheet PDF

Twelve Years a Slave: Was the Case of Solomon Northup Exceptional? 2 -- Permission is granted to educators to reproduce this worksheet for classroom use 5 Why were free black children especially targeted by kidnappers? List all that apply

What is 12 years a slave?

William L. Andrews, Professor of English, University of North Carolina Twelve Years a Slave: Narrative of Solomon Northup, a Citizen of New York, Kidnapped in Washington City in 1841 and Rescued in 1853 (to be referred to as Twelve Years a Slave) is the focus of this lesson on analyzing messages in slave narratives.

What was the purpose of a slave narrative?

Slave narratives had a mission: to convert readers’ hearts and minds to the antislavery cause by revealing how slavery undermined and perverted the principal institutions upon which America was founded: representative democracy, Protestant Christianity, capitalism, and marriage and the family.

What rights did the slaves have?

The slaves lost their right to be free, to enjoy the fruits of their labor, sometimes to choose their spouses, to keep their families intact and see their children grow up, to choose their profession, and, for the women, to choose their sexual partners.

What happened to the slave masters?

The slave masters may have profited financially but they suffered personally becoming hypocrites (Mr. Ford), becoming callous to the suffering of others (all of the plantation owners and overseers, including the Fords, the Epps, Chapin and Tibbeats) or by becoming a torturer and abuser of their fellow human beings (Epps and Tibbeats).

Lesson Plans and Resources for Twelve Years A Slave

OVERVIEW AND ESSENTIAL QUESTIONS

The materials in this unit plan are meant to be flexible and easy to adapt to your own classroom. Each chapter has

discussion questions provided in a later section.

Through reading the book and completing any of the suggested activities, students can achieve any number of the

following understandings: - Knowledge and education cannot be taken away from an individual. - The most effective way to control another person is to dehumanize them. - An unjust system traps both the victims and the perpetrators.

Students should be introduced to the following key questions as they begin reading. They can be discussed both in

universal terms and in relation to specific characters in the book:

Universal

- Why do humans repeatedly set up systems to control and dehumanize each other? - What systems in this world can you break free of? And what systems of this world are impossible to remove yourself from?

Book-Specific

enslaved? How does it influence his understanding of what is happening? - Why was slavery such a successful, enduring part of American history? - Who does Northrup fault in his story: the system of slavery, or the individuals that captured and enslaved him personally?

Many of the reader response questions and suggested projects relate to these essential questions, and they can be

looped back to frequently during class discussions and activities.

IN-CLASS INTRODUCTION

This lesson is designed to provide students with a one-class introduction to the book. The lesson can be used to

start off a class reading of the text, or to encourage them to read it independently. As a recipient of One Book resources, the Free Library requires that you devote one class period to introducing Twelve Years A Slave to students, either using this lesson or your own plan.

Introduction

guide, or you can use the links below: - A film still showing Chiwetel Ejofor as Northrup: - The portrait of Northrup created for the original publication of his memoir: you know about him.

3. Present the following three documents to students, either on paper or electronically:

- The 1840 census listing Northrup as a free man - The slave manifest for the Brig Orleans, where Northrup is listed as Plat Hamilton - The 1850 slave census for Avoyelles Parish, Louisiana

4. Distribute the books and read the first three paragraphs of Chapter I aloud.

Thanks in part to the recent film version of the book, there are a wealth of online resources available for lesson

planning and activities. If you are looking for a comprehensive lesson plan, the Penguin Companion provides a

complete set of resources.

ONLINE RESOURCES

LESSON PLANS & RESOURCES

Penguin Companion Lesson Plans

A comprehensive PDF version of lesson plans put out by the publisher, including a historical overview, discussion

questions by chapter, a variety of final assessment options, and guidance for using the film adaptation in class.

Weekly Lesson Plans

Designed to be used one day a week for five weeks as students read independently. http://twelveyearsaslave.org/education/ Vocabulary Chapters 1-7: http://www.vocabulary.com/lists/397317#view=notes Vocabulary Chapters 8-14: http://www.vocabulary.com/lists/397434#view=notes Vocabulary Chapters 15-22: http://www.vocabulary.com/lists/397482#view=notes

Free Online Audio Book

An essential aide for students who are challenged by the language of the text. ´Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girlµ by Harriet Jacobs especially relevant, although students could also pick and choose any of the sections. Slave Narrative from the Federal Writers Project, 1936-1938

A national project where writers interviewed over 2,300 former slaves about their experiences. Follow the Voices

and Faces from the Collection link for highlights from the database.

Text To Text Analaysis from The New York Times

Excerpts from the book alongside an article discussing the genre of slave narratives, including questions for

discussion or assessment at the end. intrigued-historians/

Portraits of Solomon Northrup·s Descendants

PRINT RESOURCES

Why Didn·t an American Make ·12 Years A Slave?· By David Thompson for The New Republic

Some films are like battles. In the shock and horror that is left behind, it is gross to talk of victory, the deft strokes of

tactics, or even the radiant courage of the parties. Emerging from 12 Years a Slave, one fears the triteness of

it is more to the point to say that some films, like some battles, were necessary. Nothing was as important at

Stalingrad as the Soviet insistence that that battle be fought. Without it, the world, not just the Russian citizen,

would have asked, ³Why did we not fight?´ And so as we come away from 12 Years a Slave, one persistent

question is: why has this film not been made before? Why have we been waiting? And what were we waiting for,

when the necessity of this picture was as evident as the heat of the day?

Why had we not heard of Solomon Northup? Well, historians will reply that some of us have known. His slave

journal was published in 1853 and received much attention. Northup traveled and spoke widely about how as a free

man and a family man living in Saratoga, he was lured to Washington on a job and then kidnapped and sold into

slavery in Louisiana. It was twelve years before his legal rights as a free man could be asserted. His book was re-

issued in a scholarly edition in 1968, and it was what prompted this film. Northup was a hero in the abolitionist

movement. But no one knows when he died, where, or how. Did he vanish? Was he ill? Did he opt for a quiet life?

Or was Solomon Northup taken a second time by people outraged at his prominence, and ruined by his story? Was

he murdered, or erased?

So while this film is necessary, and belated, and made by an Englishman, and while it is good and more than good,

and self-pity as negotiable forms of guilt. Let us just say that it has taken a hundred years before a halfway

American film could show the impact of a whip on a bare back. The director Steve McQueen has been compelled

by the necessity of such a scene, done largely in one intricate camera setup in which a once-favored slave named

Fassbender), who believes that Northup is going easy on the young woman and determines that his own tortured

notion of her demands physical expression. You see, she had been compelled to be his mistress for years, and

perhaps he loved her in his hideous way.

That is the climax of the film, the savagery we have known was coming. It is a hard scene to witness, and it has

been managed with tact and decency. Not long after this sequence, Northup meets a phlegmatic abolitionist, played

by Brad Pitt (a producer on the film), who begins the process that will free him. But it is a price of freedom that

Solomon must say farewell to Patsey, leaving her in scarred captivity. No one knows what became of her.

Steve McQueen is a Londoner of Grenadian descent. Chiwetel Ejiofor (Northup) was born in east London, to

Nigerian parents. Michael Fassbender had a German father and an Irish mother. Benedict Cumberbatch, who plays

is not that the picture has excluded Americans: the photographer Sean Bobbitt is American, and he shot

Sarah Paulson and Alfre Woodard, and note the iniquity in their roles²the wife of the cruel slave-owner and a

former slave who has entered genteel white society on the plantation. The film counts officially as a production of

the United Kingdom and the United States, but it is a question as pressing as what happened to Solomon Northup

that Americans did not make this picture.

of a Nation. What will we do in our land of anniversaries to mark that occasion? How will the film business greet the

awkward occasion, when no movie ever did more to create this business than The Birth of a Nation? It made the

money that built theaters and production companies, and was the film that encouraged the audience to be patient

and excited with long-form narratives. It is now²as it always was²a work of flagrant racism in which white actors

in blackface play treacherous and irresponsible black characters and in which the white plantation class is idealized,

not least in its formation of the Ku Klux Klan as a ³chivalrous´ band meant to suppress ³supposed´ black excesses.

It is a shaming birthday that awaits us for a film that cannot be played as an entertainment or even a mark of

history. It can be offered only in a spirit of apology and necessary recompense.

What do we mean by recompense? Well, the edifice of the movie business was built on this shaming film. Should

monies be paid to black citizens to make good the horror of purchased souls? A redistribution of resources?

Perhaps the awkward and often inept attempts to open American institutions to black participation should be

persisted with until slavery is forgotten. It is indelible and it stains our independence. And if we are prepared to be

honest about The Birth of a Nation, then we might examine the inner complacency of Gone with the Wind, a venture

that has not yet really come under the lash for its racism.

Is it mere coincidence that the second most important film in the history of this business also deals with the South

and has its black characters (all minor) as fond onlookers at the turbulent romantic history of its white boys and

girls? Gone with the Wind is not directly offensive in what it does and says, but it is a work that Mistress Epps, the

Sarah Paulson character in 12 Years a Slave, might have been happy to read. Gone with the Wind is still a favorite,

the film of films, the Hollywood monument, and a goldmine that kept a company like Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer going

for at least another ten years.

But then consider this: the world premiere of Gone with the Wind, in December 1939, was set for Atlanta. There

would be a great celebration in the city, with all the people from the picture²its producer David Selznick, the

novelist Margaret Mitchell, Vivien Leigh, and Clark Gable. The Selznick company assumed that Hattie McDaniel

(who played Mammy) would be in the party. Then word came out of Atlanta from Mayor John Hartsfield (after whom

was horrified. He protested. But Hattie McDaniel did not go to Atlanta.

There would be other parties. At the night of the Academy Awards in February 1940, the occasion was done as a

banquet. Contending films took tables for the night. The largest of these tables was for Gone With the Wind, which

was expected to walk away with a cartload of statuettes. One of those prizes went to Hattie McDaniel. Her

supporting actress win for Mammy was the first Oscar to go to a black person. But McDaniel had to make a long

walk to get her Oscar. For she had not been invited to sit at the Selznick table. She and a companion were put off in

a corner at a small table for two.

It is not that 12 Years a Slave is a ³must see´ in terms of normal entertainment, or a rival to the candy of The Help

or The Butler. No, it is a film that necessity and education demand seeing. But it was being opened gradually by

Fox Searchlight (123 theaters in its third week), as if they feared that it could prove discomforting for the necessary

audience. One of the most piercing things in 12 Years is seeing the damage that slavery did to the white race. The

Epps characters are odious in their cruelty and mendacity, and that devastation is still active. This is an era in which

novel The Purchase, about a Quaker who becomes a slave-owner at the end of the eighteenth century, has gone

about time such side tables were dragged into the center of the American room.quotesdbs_dbs17.pdfusesText_23
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